Response to Black Collaborators With Colonialism in Haiti: Guy Philippe is a Criminal not a Hero

Èzili Dantò’s Note
In 2004, with only one and a half years left in his term, the repugnant Haiti oligarchs in collaboration with foreign powers took down Haiti’s democratically elected president. The intellectuals in Haiti mostly said nothing. Now they’re speaking out. These collaborators with empire were silent or complicit as empire used warlord Guy Philippe to perform low intensity warfare, hitting police stations since 2001 to destabilize the constitutionally elected Aristide-Neptune government. Group 184 and the coup detat Haitians effectively invited the US, UN, France and Canada to come and take president Aristide out on the 200th year of Haiti’s independence. 13 years later, on January 5, 2017, in a joint DEA-Haiti operation, the US came for Guy Philippe on money laundering and drug charges, possibly using a law signed by the 50th legislature under the Martelly coup detat government regarding money laundering and financing terrorism. But the same coup detat factions who called on foreign powers and CIA-backed death squads to unseat a democratically elected president, are hypocritically crying foul as they fall on their own sword. This is a response (in Kreyòl/Haitian) to a black collaborator from Guy Philippe’s Grand Anse area explaining why he’s good riddance. The English text is found here and at Guy Philippe is a Criminal Not A Hero. See also PHTK Se Yon Tranblemandtè

UPDATE,
April 24, 2017 – Guy Philippe pleads guilty

CIA asset, Guy Philippe, who led the US-backed 2004 bicentennial regime change for Bush that brought in MINUSTAH, and who was arrested on drug charges by the DEA, pleads guilty to “conspiracy to commit money laundering stemming from his receipt of cash payments derived from the proceeds of narcotics sales that occurred in Miami, Florida, and elsewhere in the United States in the late 1990s and early 2000s.” Philippe, “a former high-ranking official in the Haitian National Police – was on the payroll of the drug traffickers for years, receiving (from $1.5 million to $3.5 million) in bribe payments for protecting drug shipments…” (Department of Justice, Press Release)